Until nationals has passed my focus is solely on bridges, however throughout my middle school years I built towers. Side connection varies between teams, but unlike bridges almost definitely requires a jig for connection of sides. I haven't built science olympiad towers in a while (though I did build a toothpick one earlier in the year for a physics competition), but after the two years of designing and building in high school I imagine my approach at building towers here will be very different.T-B wrote:I know several of the big guns are getting ready for nationals; we got second in our state but our team wasn't anywhere near to moving on to nationals. So it looks like our bridge building career may be over. I'm ready to get started on towers. Has anyone built towers before? How do you connect the sides? What is you want to use three sides instead of four? Bass for the big compressions pieces, laminated balsa? What about beam shapes? L, V, T shapes. If you laminate where the two sides meet, then how do you miter those joints along the long side of the wood. I'm probably way ahead of myself here since they haven't even announced the specs yet, but I want to get started over the summer. Don't I say that every year?
You're asking about laminating where the two sides meet... I'm not exactly sure what sides you are referring to. Are you confusing connection with lamination? or simply talking about laminating the initial two separate sides?